Kelley Rambo wrote:
> I have a question about Ly Bens Dystonys. When we were trying to learn
> it, one of our group said that she had done it in a line of couples. We
> tried this and ended up getting quite tangled
Hmm. We do it as a line, and tangling is never an issue. I actually find
it quite natural in a line. There's no partner-changing involved.
But keep in mind that there are *wildly* differing reconstructions of Ly
Bens -- the original is pretty vague, so there is much room for
disagreement. So it's entirely possible that the reconstruction we do
(which might be what your group member learned) works as a line, but the
one you're currently doing doesn't.
(And note that I'm not taking sides on which reconstructions are more or
less plausible here -- I haven't studied it yet. We do this version
mostly because it fits the music we like.)
> How do people in the East Kingdom finish Parson's Farewell? One set of
> instructions suggests doing two circular heys, but the original sounds a
> bit different.
Hmm. Don't recall a circular-hey version, but there are again competing
reconstructions. (Indeed, I published two back-to-back in the Letter of
Dance.) Locally (and I think more generally in the East), we do Baron
Patri's reconstruction:
http://www.pbm.com/~lindahl/lod/vol1/patriparson.html
Roughly summarizing what that means in practice -- you take right hands
with your partner, go around until both men are in the middle, and then
they lead a line Hey for four until everyone is in the other couple's
place and go around with right hands again. Then the music shifts;
reverse hands, and go back the same way, but with the women leading the
Hey from the middle.
-- Justin
Dancemaster, Carolingia